My Top Twenty Albums

1. Roy Harper – Stormcock
2. Beatles – White Album
3. Captain Beefheart – Lick my Decals off
4. Bob Dylan – Bringing it all back home
5. Byrds – Notorious Byrd Brothers
6. Love – Forever Changes
7. Doors – Strange Days
8. Mothers of Invention – We’re only in it for the money
9. Cream – Disraeli Gears
10. Jimi Hendrix Experience – Electric Ladyland
11. Pink Floyd – Wish you were here
12. Country Joe & the Fish – Electric Music for the Body & Mind
13. Neil Young – Harvest
14. Joni Mitchell – Blue
15. Bob Marley – Exodus
16. John Lennon – Imagine
17. Sex Pistols – Never mind the Bollocks
18. Stiff Little Fingers – Inflammable Material
19. Little Richard – Here’s Little Richard
20. Son House – Death Letter Blues

537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 – Paperback/Kindle


537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 eBook : Goodwin, Opher: Amazon.co.uk: Books

246. Arthur Alexander – Greatest hits

There were lots of great R&B singers in the States. They mainly recorded for the Race labels for black audiences and white kids rarely got to hear them until Alan Freed and the other Rock ‘n’ Roll Jocks opened up the market and promoted multiracial audiences and desegregation.

In Britain the good old BBC refused to play most of the Rock & Roll and R&B under the delusion that they were saving the British public from such terrible things. They considered it primitive.

Consequently the British Beat groups of the sixties had a whole seam of rich pickings to mine. They set about buying obscure singles off the merchant seamen and copying them. Nobody here had heard any of this stuff and it sounded exciting. They lapped it up.

Arthur Alexander was one of those hugely talented unheard exponents of the dark arts of R&B. His songs were mercilessly plundered.

The Beatles sang ‘Soldier of Love’ and recorded ‘Anna, (go to him)’ on their first album, Gerry & the Pacemakers did ‘You’re the reason’ and ‘A shot of rhythm and Blues’, the Rolling Stones did ‘You’d better move on’. Their versions were good but none of them had Arthur’s great rich voice and brilliant arrangements – to hear that you had to go to the real thing.


247. Miracles – cookin’ with the Miracles

Smokey Robinson and the Miracles were one of those R&B groups that started up in the late fifties. Smokey had this amazing smooth voice in a high register that made them very distinctive. The Miracles were the very first act to sign up to Berry Gordy’s Tamla Motown label in 1959.

They were an instantaneous success with their hit ‘Shop around’ in 1960. They went on to record a string of hits all with that smooth Tamla backing and Smokey’s eloquent expressive voice. These included ‘The tracks of my tears’, ‘I second that emotion’, ‘You really got a hold on me’, ‘Mickey’s Monkey’ and ‘Tears of a clown.

They were one of Motown’s biggest acts. The Beatles did a great cover version of ‘You really got a hold on me’ on their first album.


248. Deep Purple – Machine Head

Frank Zappa was playing in the Montreux Casino that Deep Purple were supposed to be recording this album. It was burnt down when a fan ignited a flare in the building. Ian Gillan wrote the lyrics to the song ‘Smoke on the water’ describing looking across the lake as the smoke from the fire lay on the water and flames shot up into the sky. ‘Smoke on the water’, with its highly memorable riff played by every aspiring Heavy Metal would-be guitarist, proved to be one of their most popular songs Deep purple ever played.

Frank Zappa took a slightly different view of the event. Everyone got out alive but he had to watch the fire consume the building and all his equipment.

Other highlights of the album are ‘Space Truckin’’, which told the story of playing concerts on different planets, and ‘Highway Star’ with its highly regarded guitar solo.

The album formed part of that genre that was going to be described as Heavy Metal. It was one of the seminal albums and along with bands like Black Sabbath started a whole genre of music typified by the heavy riff and driving bass. The style was loud, aggressive and basic. It proved to be one of the most popular and commercial forms of Rock.


249. Black Sabbath – We sold our souls for Rock ‘n’ Roll

I first saw Black Sabbath when they were at the height of their occult act in which they carried out a black art ceremony on stage. It was all very theatrical and gimmicky to me but it certainly was a spectacle in the fashion of Screaming Jay Hawkins and Alice Cooper. The horror and occult theme certainly made them stand out from the multicoloured hippies peace and love fashion. But the band were producing that heavy riffing style that was to put them, along with bands like Deep Purple, in the vanguard as pioneers of the Heavy Metal genre. The genre itself is a very loose one featuring bands as diverse as Led Zeppelin, Status Quo, Budgie and Nazareth. But what’s in a name?

The track Black Sabbath, with its bell, and heavy riff was the track that epitomised their occult phase. It suited Ozzy Osbourne to a tee.

The band originated from Birmingham England and had a lot about them. They were a lot more than just a few heavy chords. Tony Iommi, even without his finger-tips was a brilliant inventive guitarist; Geezer Butler was not only a great bassist but could write interesting lyrics, Ozzy provided the vocal power and Bill Ward drove it with his solid drum beats. Geezer’s lyrics delved into those recessive that Heavy Metal rarely dared to tread, such as anti-war, social disorder and the environment. They rapidly moved out of their horror and occult phase to extend into other areas. Unfortunately, like many of the other bands, as soon as they became successful they were inundated with huge quantities or drugs and alcohol and that, as we have so often seen, took its toll.

This album is packed with classic tracks and they all stand out and are highly memorable. ‘Paranoid’ is one of those tracks that is now considered one of the top Heavy Metal epics. ‘War pigs’ with its great sonorous crashing doomy chords the best Heavy Metal anti-war song ever.


250. Al Stewart – Love chronicles

Al Stewart used to play the same Folk and student club scene as Roy Harper in the late sixties in London so I came across him quite a lot. He was a Scottish singer who wrote intelligently about life in Bedsit land, the scene on the streets, historical themes and relationships. His songs were populated with various inadequate characters from all walks of life who were so well described that you felt you knew them. Al was portrayed in Melody Maker as a rival to Roy as they tried to manifest some sort of rivalry. They love that stuff and do it regularly – Beatles/Stones and Oasis/Blur – except on a different level.

His first album ‘Bedsitter images’ was overproduced as an attempt to break through commercially but none-the-less it went down quite well. It did not establish Al as a Pop Star.

‘Love Chronicles’ was an altogether different kettle of songs. The guitar and vocals were much more to the fore with a much more sympathetic production. There were only six songs as the title track ‘Love Chronicles’ was a twenty minute epic that was a journey through Al’s love life. It was made famous because it was the first recorded song to feature the word ‘fucking’. It was an interesting song that held your attention.

‘Life and life only’ tells the story of a public schoolmaster and his drab life, it relates the misery of a joyless marriage and sexual repression. ‘In Brooklyn’ is the story of a girl in New York and an affair with a young hippie girl. ‘Old Compton Street’ is the story of a sad Soho prostitute. ‘The Ballad of Mary Foster’ is another story this time of poor Mary who marries into a life of comfort and misery.

There is a theme to this album; it one of sexual repression and the entrapment of women marriage and by social mores.

It was an album I play a lot. Al has a good way with words and writes great songs. I much prefer this and the follow-up album ‘Zero she flies’ to the much more successful ‘Year of the cat’.

251. JJ Cale – Okie

This was JJ’s third album released in 1974. In one sense it was the same languid style of laid-back rock that characterised his previous two. It had all the same ingredients with the hypnotic repeating guitar line and JJ’s soft semi-spoken words. If it wasn’t so good it would almost be easy listening. It chugs along effortlessly yet it works.

A JJ Cale song is instantly recognisable. Nobody else does anything quite like it yet Cale seems to be able to come up with variation after variation. Seemingly there are an endless number of these guitar lines to build on and once he has got this repetitive jag he can churn it out and work round it. In many ways it works on the same principle as with the North Country Blues though the outcome is totally different.

In one sense JJ Cale would be at home as supermarket music but the quality of the music sets it apart.

I love this album because you can get lost in it. Every track is distinctive yet they all have the JJ magic. The tracks that stand out for me are ‘I Got the Same old Blues again’, ‘Cajun Moon’, ‘Ever lovin’ woman’, ‘I’ll be there (if you want me)’ and ‘Rock And Roll Records’.

252. PJ Harvey – Rid of me

The album ‘Rid of me’ crashed out of the ether into my ears in 1993. The opening track ‘Rid of me’ opened with a nice simple bass line and PJ singing delicately with a great pent-up emotion that suddenly explodes as the anguish of a jilted lover turns into fury and revenge. It felt like you were suddenly lifting the lid off that pot on the stove to find the pet bunny boiling away. It was so emotionally charged.

One thing that was obvious was that we were not dealing with any demure young genteel English rose. Polly might be English but there was no reserve. Polly let it all out in one great burst. Nothing was repressed here.

This should have been obvious after the electrifying dynamics of the explicit ‘Sheena-na-gig’ off her previous album ‘Dry’. Polly was quite willing to explore any topic with honesty and candour. Not only that but the music was raw, experimental and screaming with energy as if the electrons were being ripped off in some storm of cosmic intensity. This was raw emotion. It was quite obvious that she had thoroughly absorbed Captain Beefheart’s experimental stridency and coupled it to a Punk attitude.  ‘Legs’ picked up the theme of emotional confusion as the emotions of the jilted raged and poured out in every possible direction – ‘I might as well be dead but I could kill you instead’ – you certainly got the impression that she was capable of it. There was strength about Polly Jean.

‘Rub it til it bleeds’ was quite a provocative title. The song once again built slowly with a perverse erotic intensity.

‘Man-Size’ was again delivered with that pent-up fury. It was as if Polly was putting herself into the psyche of a chauvinistic male. There was nothing weaker about this sex. You felt that Polly was perfectly capable of covering the sexist yobs with petrol and setting them on fire.

This was one angry album. Each track had its own passion and emotional angle from ‘you leave me dry’ to ‘50Ft Queenie’.

Rarely have I been so moved by an album. The strength and intensity of the music, lyrics and emotional anguish were so raw and direct that they seared into you.

This was well beyond anything Punk had produced.

253. David Gray – A century ends

This was David’s first album. The album was delivered in a sparsely produced folk-rock style with David and acoustic guitar on some tracks and a fuller backing on others.

This was David Gray as an indie singer-songwriter doing what he wanted. It wasn’t a Simon Cowell production for the plastic ‘Britain’s got Talent’ or a studio manufactured product tailored to not upset and appeal to the lowest common denominator. Yet these songs were interesting, different and eminently accessible.

I remember despairing of music in the early 2000s and asking Roy Harper if he’d heard anything worth listening to that he thought might become big. He thought for a minute and recommended David Gray.

It was only after the huge success of ‘White Ladder’ that his past work was re-evaluated and rediscovered.

These are great songs with good lyrics. ‘Shine’ and ‘I’ll lead you upstairs’ are two of the best.

Extract – 537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 (Paperback/Kindle)

I have selected 537 essential albums. They are diverse and brilliant. These are what everybody should have in their collection.

In this book I tell you something about each one of them. This is volume one. The second volume will follow at some time! See if you agree!

537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 eBook : Goodwin, Opher: Amazon.co.uk: Books

254. Gang of Four – Entertainment

Gang of Four are a post punk band. Entertainment was their first album and was released in 1979.

They are one of my three favourite Punk bands. Their lyrics are extremely intelligent and an expose of the social and political scenario with all the outrageous greed that runs the world.

They are not just about lyrics though. This was a highly developed style. The guitar sounds great with its strident sound and riffs; there is a lot of experimentation in song structure and dynamics, use of feed-back and talk over; there is a great call and answer interchange between n the vocals and all this is coupled with a great bass which is very prominent in the mix and a great pounding bass.

As a debut album this is very well constructed.

They have it all.

There is not a weak track on this album but the most striking for me are ‘Anthrax’, ‘Ether’, ‘Return the gift’ and ‘At home he’s a tourist’. I love the rawness of the music and the sound they generated but I loved the sentiments even more. If only music could change the world just like we dreamed long ago that it would do.

255. Ry Cooder – Paradise & Lunch

This was Ry’s fourth solo album. He came out from playing his session work to produce his own material. The sound on this album was centred on Ry’s crystal clear guitar.

It was a nice smooth album with Ry producing a nice mix of Gospel, Blues, R&B and Rock. The musicianship and production made it sound so soft that it appeared effortless. All the instruments melded together so perfectly.

Apart from one song the album was made up of traditional, blues, Gospel and R&B covers. These included the Blind Willie McTell ‘Married Man’s a Fool’, Bobby Womack’s ‘It’s all over now’, JB Lenoir’s ‘Fool for a cigarette’ the old work-song ‘Tamp them up solid’ and the gospel track ‘Jesus on the mainline’.

They were subjugated to Ry’s special treatment complete with chorus and call and response. It all worked fine.

The album ended with ‘Ditty Wah Ditty’. This was done as a nice light acoustic number. This is  a bit like coming back full circle because ‘Diddy Wah Diddy’ was the first single that Captain Beefheart released, except this was done as a R&B number, and Ry Cooder was the guitarist on the Captain’s first album.

256. Jimi Hendrix – Concerts

Well one thing is sure and that is that you can’t have too much Hendrix especially the live stuff. Jimi was a supernatural wonder, a man for whom new superlatives need to be invented. He only released 4 albums in his life-time and yet there are now countless CDs of unreleased material, studio outtakes, studio jams and live material. I just did a count up and I have a staggering 725 CDs of Jimi.

I love all the material. To hear Jimi noodling away, jamming to a groove in the studio, is quite incredible. Then there are the raucous early concerts and the finished article. There were many faces to Jimi Hendrix, some soft and lyrical and others loud, harsh and raw. Whatever mood or style the one thing that was consistent was the quality of the musicianship. Jimi did not stop. His whole short life was music. His guitar was part of him and he was so technically proficient that the only limitations in the sounds he could produce were those of his own imagination.

These tracks are the early Jimi between 1968 and 1970 when he was fronting the Experience with his dare-devil guitar histrionics and showmanship. They capture the excitement but I can tell you that no matter how loud you play them, how good your sound system is or powerful your imagination they don’t come near to the excitement of actually being there.

These tracks were all recorded in the States at San Francisco, San Diego, New York and Los Angeles. So, unfortunately I was not at any of these concerts; but I did see him three times and I can picture him there when I play these.

There has never been anything like Jimi Hendrix.

257. Elvis Costello – Spike

The early punky Costello was great and it is normal for an artist to mellow and mature as they get older, wiser and more adept. I am pleased to say that while Elvis certainly did develop his music, broaden it and bring in different styles, the power and ferocity of his lyrics and delivery were only intensified. This album was exceptionally spiky in places.

This was released in 1989 and was his twelfth studio album. It also contains one of my favourite tracks.

At this time Elvis moved labels and was also co-writing with Paul McCartney. Who knows? Perhaps the Beatles could have reformed with Elvis taking the John Lennon role? He certainly had the venom and bite to do justice to it. He could have pulled off the acerbic part quite well.

The two tracks he wrote with Paul are very good. ‘Veronica’ was very commercial but ‘Pads paws and claws’ was more experimental but still very accessible and catchy. It was a collaboration that showed promise.

‘Baby plays around’ was a beautiful song, sung very delightfully with a great deal of melancholy concerning a break-up of a relationship in which one’s partner is openly unfaithful. ‘…This Town’ was the opening track and was much more like the Elvis of his first few albums. This was the Punk Elvis lamenting the fact that in order to get on you had to be a complete bastard. ‘God’s comic’ is a great song and send-up of religion, a priest who had not been too religious has an audience with God who is listening to Andrew Lloyd Webber and wondering if he should have given the world to the monkeys. ‘Deep Dark Truthful Mirror’ is a song about confronting your own failings.

This was an album with a number of different styles, moods, instrumentation and types of songs. If that was all it would be an excellent album but that wasn’t all. There were two songs that had an exceptional impact on me. The first was the snarling diatribe against hanging ‘Let him dangle’. It told the story of a couple of young thieves who were cornered by the police. Young Bentley was already under arrest and Craig had a gun pointing at the police officer. ‘Let him have it,’ Bentley told Craig. Craig shot the officer dead. Craig was underage got life and Bentley was hung. Elvis turned it into a passionate expose of the viciousness of State murder and the hatred and primitive revenge involved. It was a thought-provoking tale delivered with real anger.

But the stand out track for me was ‘Tramp the dirt down’. It still sends chills running through me when I play it. The melodic beauty of the song only serves to accentuate the hatred in the lyrics as Elvis contemplates the cold, calculated duplicity of Margaret Thatcher. I still have a vivid memory of her standing on the steps at number ten delivering her election speech at the start of her term of office saying how she would bring harmony to the country while already plotting to break the unions and create havoc. Elvis pours out his vitriol as he goes through the trail of Tory deceit over the treatment of public services, the health service and the glorification of the Falklands war. It’s probably not too late to get there and tramp that dirt down so she never gets out, perhaps a good sharp stake should be deployed first though!

258. The Fall – Slates

The Fall were one of John Peel’s favourite bands. It is easy to see why. They have consistently gone about doing their own thing throughout the whole of their long career without the slightest nod to fashion, commerciality or anybody’s views.

Mark E Smith is the Fall. Despite all the personnel changes he is the guvnor! He directs the music, bosses the band around and dictates what goes on. He once said that even if it was him with his moth-in-law on bongos it would be the Fall.

They go about producing their raw output of post-punk without regard to taste, political correctness or the media and often with seeming contempt for their own audience.

I have been to live performances with strange film intros that went on and on, Mark seemingly so intoxicated he could not function, and virtual fights on stage. I’ve also been to concerts where they have motored along completely in tune with the audience with everyone bouncing about and singing along with Mark.

This is the usual type of Fall album. The driving riffs with Mark reciting and shouting his lyrics over it. The result is great. I can’t say he has a great voice but the effect is more interesting than all the plastic bands put together. From ‘Hip Priest’ to ‘Slates, slags etc.’ it drives along. There is that repetitive coda and variation that makes it interesting. You can feel the Captain Beefheart influence.

259. Randy Newman – Lonely at the top

This has all Randy’s great songs all gathered together. It gives you a great view of Randy’s genius. There is so much of Randy’s quirky humour and idiosyncratic observation. He is able to hone a lyric to its bare bones, deliver it with perfect phrasing to a simple but perfectly effective backing. This album has many of my favourites.

‘Political Science’ is a sardonic view of the rest of the world in which Randy suggests that America should just nuke everybody, except Australia – don’t want to hurt no kangaroo – boom goes London! Boom Paris!

‘God’s song (That’s why I love mankind)’ is a send up of religion in which God is a character who is a capricious individual who doesn’t care a jot about people yet is amazed by the antics of humans in the face of his vindictiveness.

There’s the full spectrum here with ‘Short people’, ‘Rednecks’, ‘Jolly Coppers on parade’, ‘I love L.A.’ ‘Germany before the war’, ‘Birmingham’ etc etc. The album ends with his own send up of himself with ‘Lonely at the top’.

What a song-writer! What humour!

260. Sam Cooke – Portrait of a legend

Sam was the guy with the smooth silken voice who was capable of big soulful ballads, Pop songs and more rocking numbers. That voice came straight out of Gospel. He started singing at an early age and became the lead vocalist with the leading Gospel group ‘The Soul Stirrers’.

He left Gospel to move into secular R&B focussing on producing singles and immediately hit with ‘You send me’. This crossed over into the Pop charts and was followed by a string of other hits ‘Only sixteen’, ‘Cupid’, ‘Chain gang’, ‘Little Red Rooster’, ‘What a wonderful world’, ‘Bring it on home to me’, ‘Twistin’ the night away’ and ‘Shake’.

There was a great deal of variation in his work. A comparison between the Pop of ‘Cupid’ and the Blues of ‘Little Red Rooster’ (recorded before the Stones did their version). He also tackled issues like the Civil Rights fight for justice which was an incendiary thing to do at the time; his song ‘A change is going to come’ was a brave thing to do.

Sam’s soulful voice was one of the precursors of Soul music. Unfortunately Sam was not there to participate. He was shot dead at a motel in very dubious circumstances. Seemingly he was drunk and took a girl back to his room. She stole his clothes and ran off claiming he was going to rape her and the distraught Sam was shot dead by the white motel owner. We shall never know by there seemed to be a racial element involved in this.

Extract – 537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 

537 Essential Rock Albums – Pt. 1 The first 270 eBook : Goodwin, Opher: Amazon.co.uk: Books

This is not your average run through an opinionated list of somebody’s favourite albums. This is much more than that. By the time you get to the end of the book you will be in no doubt as to the type of person who has written this and what their views are. This is Opher at his most extreme and outspoken.

He’s been there at the front through thousands of shows, purchased tens of thousands of albums and listened to more music than seems possible to fit into a single life. He’s run courses on Rock Music, written books and been there in the studio with many of the greats. But more important than that is that he has lived the life. He was there living it.

You’ll find a lot of albums and artists in here that you will never have heard of and they are all brilliant. You’ll find out a lot of information about them that you did not know; but more than that you will hear someone who was there telling you why they were so important to him and giving his view on the issues around and in that music. There is a depth, a political and social perspective and a personal involvement.

The passion suffuses this like TNT through dynamite.

Whether you agree with the choices or not you’ll love the journey.

261. Jeff Beck – Truth

Jeff Beck was one of the world’s great innovative guitarists. He came from my neck of the woods in the Deep South of the Thames Delta and played in one of my local groups – The Tridents – before going on to replace Clapton in the Yardbirds. His arrival sparked the most experimental and dynamic style of the band as they moved from R&B and Pop into psychedelia. Beck’s guitar-work was highly original and innovative and drove the band into a new level. They became widely accepted on the emerging Underground scene as a serious band.

Then it all started falling apart just when it should have been at its best. The Yardbirds had taken on Jimmy Page and had the most incredible double lead guitar attack ever. However it was not to be. Jeff started becoming inconsistent and the band fell apart. Jimmy took the remnants off with him to form Led Zeppelin. Keith went off to Renaissance and Jeff went off to go solo and then form the Jeff Beck Group. That band consisted of John Stewart on vocals, Ronnie Wood on bass and Micky Waller on drums. It was an incredible line-up.

I saw them play a couple of times and Jeff was always stunning on guitar though I never hugely liked John’s vocals.

This album ‘Truth’ is one of the great albums of British Progressive Rock. It features a number of great progressive bluesy and psychedelic numbers alongside some delicate workings of traditional songs like ‘Greensleeve’ and psyched out ‘Ole’ Man River’ which I always thought were a little incongruous though they seemed to work and gave the album another dimension.

The album starts with a version of the Yardbirds ‘Shapes of things’ in a very different psychedelic arrangement. Then there was a version of Tim Roses’ ‘Morning Dew’ and ‘Beck’s Bolero’ along with some blues favourites ‘Rock my plimsoul’ (which was a psyched out version of Rock me baby), ‘I ain’t superstitious’ and ‘You shook me’. They were all given the Beck treatment.

It was widely recognised as one of the major albums of the Progressive scene.

262. Dale Hawkins – Oh Suzie Q

In 1957 Dale Hawkins recorded ‘Suzie Q’. It was not quite like anything else. It took the Rockabilly of Elvis and married to the swamp-blues of Louisiana. The result was a bluesy guitar solo, muddy beat with cowbells and a swampy style of Rock.

He followed it up with good Rockabilly tracks like ‘Juanita’ and ‘Tornado’ which both had some of the elements but did not catch that magic of the ‘Suzie Q’ brand of Swamp Rock.

‘Oh Suzie Q’ gathers those tracks together with a rocked up version of Little Walters ‘My Baby’ and  some other strong songs ‘Four letter word (Rock)’ and ‘Wild, Wild World’.

If only Dale could have developed that initial Swamp Rock into something more he would have been as big as Elvis. Unfortunately his other material was good but not quite as good.

263. Big Mama Thornton – The original hound dog

Big Mama Thornton was a big lady with a really big voice. She was outrageous for her time often dressing as a man in her stage act. Like a number of R&B artists she came into secular music from a background of Gospel.

A lot of her early fifties output was good hard hitting R&B like ‘I smell a rat’ (covered by White Stripes) ‘They call me Big Mama’ and ‘You don’t move me no more. But there were two tracks that she is best remembered for. The first of these was ‘Hound Dog’. Big Mama was the first to record this Lieber & Stoller classic as early as 1952. She belted the song out to a great guitar backing and great R&B beat complete with yelps and whoops. It prompted a response song (quite common during those days) from Rufus Thomas on Sun Records and then was later rocked up by Elvis. The second was a slower bluesier song called ‘Ball and chain’. Big Mama Thornton did a really soulful version of this but it gained much more prominence when Janis Joplin turned it into an anguished gutsy song that often stole the show with the intensity she put into it.

Big Mama remains a seminal force. The original Hound Dog collection together most of her early tracks.

264. Nuggets – Original Artyfacts from the first Psychedelic Era, 1965-1968

When the British invasion took place in 1964 the Americans were shocked. They had no response. It was as if they had been invaded by aliens and did not understand the new language. However, it did not take them long to start to respond. All over the continent kids started growing their hair and forming bands. The country exploded with a plethora of new bands. Many of them were clones of British bands but many more were original and different. As the 1960s progressed these bands developed with it so that when the style turned to psychedelia they did their own versions.

There were hundreds of these bands. Every town and city had flourishing little flocks of them all playing to their mates in the local clubs and doing their best to pull the girls. Most of them died away without leaving any trace. Some recorded the odd single which might have sold locally and a few managed to secure major label contracts.

Because this music was rehearsed in their parents garages and was performed by young kids it began to be called Garage Punk.

It would probably have languished unheard collecting dust on shelves in those same garages and occasionally being dusted off for a sentimental nostalgic evening between old friends if it wasn’t for two men. Jack Holzman (founder of Elektra records) and Lenny Kaye (later the lead guitarist for the Patti Smith Group) had the bright idea of tracking down a number of these lesser known tracks and putting them out on a double album. At the time they thought it would be an interesting project and had no idea that in the process they would create a number of distinct genres, spark a wave of interest, and have far reaching effects further down the line. They called it Nuggets because they were collecting all those fairly obscure nuggets of music from that rich vein of the 1960s.

In actual fact it was rather a strange eclectic collection of fairly disparate recordings, some of which were quite big hits, some of which were obscure, and involving a wide range of styles. They were not really all Garage Bands or Garage Punk as Lenny described them. What they did do was spark an enormous amount of interest that started that snowball rolling down the mountainside picking up the debris from the sixties as it gained momentum until it exploded on the scene with the force of a nuclear avalanche.

The album Nuggets spawned other albums and album sets – Boulders, Pebbles, Chocolate Soup for Diabetics, High in the Mid 60s, Fading Yellow, and on and on and on. I was running a History f Rock Music course back in the 1980s as an Adult Education Course and one of my students was so smitten with Nuggets that he specialised in Garage Punk and started collecting Vinyl albums. He was a young man with disposable cash and by the end of the two year course he had amassed two thousand five hundred albums of Garage Punk Bands, compilations and related material!

On the Pop side there were the Castaways, Knickerbockers and Barbarians. On the Psychedelic side there were the Electric Prunes, Seeds, Count Five, Chocolate Watch Band and Cryan’ Shames. On the Garage Punk side you had the Leaves, Premiers and Standells. On the psyched out Bluesy side you had the Amboy Dukes, Shadows of knight and Blues Magoos. On the really weird psychedelic Punk you had the Magic Mushrooms  and Mouse & the Traps. Etc.

It was an inspired choice.

265. Pebbles Vol. 3 – The Acid gallery

Following the success of Nuggets there were three more series of Nuggets, followed by Boulders and then Pebbles. All over the planet people were scouring through the dusty tapes of tiny record labels to turn up the most obscure tracks by the most obscure bands.

There was a treasure trove of unheard youthful genius waiting to be exposed to the light of day (or the sound of ear). More importantly, as far as the compilers were concerned, there was money to be made.

The most interesting thing to come out of this as we found ourselves buried under collections of multiple volumes like Collecting Peppermint Clouds, Electric Lemonade, Nederland Nuggets, Gravel, Coloured Lights and Sounds, Back from the Grave, Aliens Psychos and Wild Things, Acid Visions, Acid Queens, A trip to Toytown, A trip through the sugar cube, A Deadly Dose of Wylde Psych, Circus Days, Flower Power, Garage Mechanics, Girls in the Garage, Mindrocker, Oceanic Odyssey, Psychedelic States, Syde Trips, Tripzone, Turds on a Bum Ride, Ugly Things, and We can Fly, was that there was so much of it. Not only that but it was global. Seemingly all over the world in the most unlikely places, such as Peru, Singapore and Saudi Arabia, young kids had been turned on by the Beatles and Stones, donned flares and beads, grown their hair and formed Beat groups, psychedelic outfits and aped what was going on in the States and Britain. It was universal. All the kids in Russia were dying to get Western Rock Music. Turkey was aflame with psychedelia.

Forget your cold war and global politics this was the unifying force of music, fashion and rebellion. Everyone wanted to be in a band from Australia to Iceland, Brazil to New Zealand. It brought the Berlin wall down, smashed the Iron Curtain, bulldozed the Bamboo Curtain, and breached the religious divides.

All we need to solve all the world’s problems is to create another Beatles and spark off a new social rebellion on the lines of the sixties.

Anyway, enough of those flights of whimsy and back to reality, or at least the unreality of Pebbles Vol. 3 – The Acid Gallery.

If you are looking for weird and wonderful then look no further. This is what happens when groups of young kids get their hands on ridiculously strong hallucinogenic substances which they indulge to extreme, learn the rudiments of an instrument, become exposed to a lot of new sounds created by their slightly older and more competent compatriots and find themselves in a recording studio with the means to indulge and experiment. Their efforts are collected here on Pebbles 3.

There are hilarious parodies such as the one of Jefferson Airplane by Jefferson Handkerchief – ‘I’m allergic to flowers’; horror stories based on a psychedelic Kafka story with ‘The Spider and the Fly’ and just psyched out weirdness like ‘Let’s take a trip’, ‘The reality of (air) fried Borsk’ and the parody of Dylan in the wonderful ‘Like a dribbling Fram’.

If you’re looking for something outlandish and different this might well be it.

266. Sam & Dave – Soul man

Both Sam and Dave started off singing Gospel in their churches before joining Gospel Bands. They met up in a Gospel band and then, after discovering that their disparate voices could gel, headed off into secular R&B. Sam had the smooth voice and Dave the more aggressive and raw. Together it worked well when doing both call-and-response or harmonising.

They soon got themselves a reputation for a dynamic act. They had their dance moves and put everything in so that they came off-stage drenched in sweat. It got them numerous nick-names like ‘The sultans of sweat’ and ‘The dynamic duo’.

It was moving to Stax and working with the MGs with people like Steve Cropper that got them their break-through as major players on the Soul scene. They had numerous hits with songs like ‘Soul Man’, ‘Hold on I’m Coming’, ‘When something is wrong with my baby’, ‘Brown sugar, Soul Sister’ and ‘You don’t know what you mean to me’.

Seemingly there was lots of tension between the two of them which led to splits, periods of time when they did not talk and even open fisticuffs.

It seemed to me that the whole Blues Brothers act was based on Sam & Dave.

267. Animals – Animals

The Animals came crashing out of Newcastle on the back of the Beat R&B boom of 1964 led by the Rolling Stones et al. They quickly established themselves as one of the rawest most authentic R&B bands in the country and stormed into the charts. Eric Burdon’s gravelly Geordie voice seemed not only well suited to the Blues but also well beyond his tender years. Amply backed by the likes of Alan Price on organ, Hilton Valentine on guitar, John Steel on drums and Chas Chandler on bass they created a unique Blues sound which can be heard on this first album. They even backed Sonny Boy Williamson on a tour of England. That album was similar to the one he did with the Yardbirds.

They specialised in cover of Bo Diddley, John Lee Hooker and Chuck Berry but varied that with some Ray Charles and even Fats Domino.

This more eclectic approach led them into the rather extraordinary field of Bob Dylan. Impressed by the early Dylan albums they were taken to do a cover of a Folk song and ended up doing a traditional one by the name of ‘House of the Rising Sun’. It was so successful with the amplified guitar and Eric’s great vocal delivery that it became enormous.

Sadly, for me, that signalled the end. Instead of continuing with great R&B stuff such as the brilliant ‘Story of Bo Diddley’ which told the story of how Bo Diddley had come into their club in Newcastle with the gorgeous Duchess to listen to them play his material only to declare that they were rubbish, in favour of a more commercial sound.

This first album is them with their rawer sound and I like that best.

268. Arthur ‘Big Boy’ Crudup – That’s Alright Mama

Arthur was a street busker and blues singer from the late forties and early fifties and was supposedly quite a large man. He did not make much of a living out of it and at one time was supposedly living in a packing crate under the platform at the Chicago railway station.

He played acoustic guitar and sometimes electrified this to record with a little combo.

His big claim to fame is that he recorded a handful of songs that were destined to become massive.

Elvis Presley came from a poor share-cropping family in Tupelo Mississippi. He was brought up in a poor area with a mixed black and white community. His musical style did not come out of nowhere. He stole it from the local blues singers that he used to love listening to.

When he recorded for Sam Philips he was doing covers of old Blues and Country songs that he’d absorbed. His genius was to give them that extra zip that changed them from Blues and Country into Rockabilly.

One of the guys that he covered was Arthur ‘Big Boy’ Crudup. Elvis’s first release was ‘That’s alright Mama’ and he also recorded ‘My baby left me’ and ‘So glad you’re mine’.

Arthur was much more than just those three numbers and other interesting tracks include ‘Mean old Frisco’, ‘Rock me mama’ and ‘Katie Mae’.

269. Big Three – Cavern Stomp

At the time when the Beatles were emerging from Liverpool on to the world stage arguably the best band in the city was the powerhouse trio called The Big Three. They consisted of Johnny Hutchinson, Johnny Gustafson and Brian Griffiths. They were reputedly the loudest and most aggressive and something of their dynamic stage act can be heard on the fabulous four track EP ‘At the Cavern’. Supposedly the whole show at the Cavern was recorded but the tape was subsequently wiped! What an act of criminality!

Unfortunately they got a big brushed to one side and short-changed as the attention swept to the Beatles and they were never fed with good enough material or received a sympathetic recording production and so never really captured their live form on record.

There were a couple of good singles including a great version of Sam Cooke’s ‘Bring it on home to me’ and their signature tune ‘Cavern Stomp’ but never made that break-through.

That wonderful EP makes it all worthwhile though and that plus all the rest is on this album.